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Working In Groups: An Overview

Working In Groups: An Overview. Dr. Rob Danin Senior English Language Fellow www.robdanin.com. Student-Centered Approach. Cooperative Learning : Johnson & Johnson, Slavin

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Working In Groups: An Overview

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  1. Working In Groups:An Overview Dr. Rob Danin Senior English Language Fellow www.robdanin.com

  2. Student-Centered Approach Cooperative Learning: Johnson & Johnson, Slavin • Aform of collaborative learning. Student work cooperatively in small groups on more teacher structured activities. • Learning is highly social and influences brain development. (Vygotsky, 1978) • Encourages collaborative behaviors among groups of individuals. • Students are individually accountable for their work. Whole group cooperation is also assessed. • Gifted students generally do not like this style of instruction. Some cultural groups also do not like this type of methodology. • Why do you think?

  3. Benefits of CooperativeSmall Groups • Provides a good opportunity for students to share information and ideas with each other. • Effective in developing students’ critical thinking and higher-order skills. • Has a positive effect on students’ interpersonal relationships. • students of different races, ethnicities and academic abilities work together

  4. The Teacher’s Role • Cooperative small groups in the classroom represents a shift from direct to guided instruction and supervision on the part of the teacher. • Be prepared to let go. Ask questions rather than direct behavior. • The students must learn to solve problems for themselves.

  5. Student Participation • Some studies have found that low-achieving students spend less time off-task in cooperative small groups. • Tasks: Consider the type of instructional activities based on the level of proficiency by your students. • Motivation: Cooperative group work increases students’ motivation to help one another.

  6. Feedback • It is essential for students working in cooperative small groups to receive feedback from the teacher on their group products and on the quality of the group process. • Students working in groups also give and receive peer feedback and need to be taught how to respond constructively to one another.

  7. Tips for Working in Groups • Give students trainingon how to work in a group. • Group Norms: Developing rules for cooperative behavior. • Group Responsibility: Creating roles within groups to enforce the norms and increase equal participation. • Group Composition: Don’t plan groups on the basis of friendships. Use a mixture of group members (community of learners). • academic achievement • gender • ethnicity • socioeconomic status

  8. Tips for Working in Groups • Accountability: Can be established in a variety of ways. For example: • Each group member is responsible for a specific part of the task. • Each group member produces an individual product using the group to help.

  9. Examples of Group Norms • See to it that everyone participates (roles). • Keep the group moving forward on the task to meet the deadline (on-task). • Make sure that students consider each other’s opinionsand listen to each other (speaking/listening). • Make sure that students give reasons and justify their arguments (reflection).

  10. Suggestions for Small Group Tasks • Pick an interesting and intellectually challenging task. • Pick a task that is real-world (authentic) than ordinary classroom work. • Pick a task that involves a variety of skills and activities. • group discussion • interviewing • role playing • manipulating • creating a model building • observing • reasoning

  11. Wrap-Up • Bring the class back together after tasks are completed for a performance or report by each group. • Be sure to provide feedback on how well groups operated, and how each individual made contributions to the task. • teacher • student • classmates

  12. Group Work Rubric

  13. Thanks for having your students work in groups!!www.robdanin.com

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